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Some Results of Christianity
119

printing very quickly, and a great deal of printing, including that of the books required in the Mission, is done at the Industrial Mission. There is also a monthly paper, called Uganda Notes, printed in English, though the boys do not know much of that language. Then, again, numbers of men are engaged in trade, selling cloth, and trading in various kinds of native products—baskets, skins, mats, growing fruit for sale, collecting eggs and fowls in the country and selling them in the towns, making harps and walking-sticks, a few of them weaving a common cotton, many of them growing cotton, collecting rubber, coffee beans, and in many ways trying to earn a respectable living. For many years there have been numbers of native blacksmiths. Iron is found in large quantities in the country, and the natives are very clever at smelting. As it is so often heated in charcoal, during the process it becomes carbonised, and of the nature of a